West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 7 Mar 1878, p. 4

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| §A "She must give it up, she must retire !" he said to himself, with some warmth. But he did not wish to make known the fact of his deep embarrasment, for he had no econAdence in her power to endure reâ€" verses. Ifshoisunk down inworakditress, the burden he had to bear would be so much heavier, and they were quite heavy enough already. ~After viéwing the matter on all sides and pondennx it deeply, Willâ€" fams came to the conelusion thit the only esonmomical change likely to meet his wife‘s approval was a;ehange from their 49676 was an ardor about the young lover that ahowed how deeply; kisâ€"lesrt was interested, and his betrothed might alâ€" *‘This will never do!" ho said to himself. We are living too extravagantly. There must be a change." most be said to live only in his presence. He flew to her side like steel to the magâ€" met when evening set him free from busiâ€" mess ; and she awaited his certain coming #o this? Woeu‘d she be willing to give up her elegant home and retire from her gay position? . :A feéling â€"of! discouragenient eame over him as these questions arose in with a trembling joy that pervaded her whole beéing. ‘The days were lTong that kept them apart, but lightningâ€"footed the looked forward to that bleased timeâ€" wlien they would hear the words spoken that were to make them one! And the time steps. Hand in hand and heart beating to heart, they entered a new path of life, carâ€" peted with flowers, and moved onward with springing feet that took their measâ€" ure to Love‘s delicious music. Swiftly passed the first seasons of their new existence. ~It was the warm, fragrant How like mould on & rich garment, or rust upon burnished steel, did indifference ereep over the pleasant surface of their lives, dimming the mutual attraction ! Williams had energy of character and a mind that found new strength in difficulty. A man of feebler intellect, less hope and less suggestion, starting wrong, as he did, would have been driven to the wall in a few years. But William discovered his «rror in time to prepare himself for the fimmpending consequences. At the close of five years from the day of his marriage he resolutely looked his affairs in the facé,and saw that, instead of being worth many thousands of dollars, he was just on the verge of bankruptey. It took him two years to get safely past the dangers that beset his way. Ong cause of his trouble lay in the extravagance of his style of livâ€" ing. 1t rather startled him. tovfind, on examining his private account, that twenâ€" ty thousand dollars had been drawn for personal expenses. One half of that sum, added to his capital, would have made all filled the air with vernal warmth. â€"â€"*@hall we ever grow cold to each other ?" said the young husband, leaning toward his bride and speaking in a tone of peculâ€" Leonard Williams was a young, ambiâ€" tiouns merchant, who was trying, unwisely, to do a large business on a small capital, and Leonard Williams and his wife were a young coupls who thought rather more of making an appearanse in the social world than was consistent with their means and prospects. He had too large & ctore, and too many goods in it, and they iived in too large a house, with too much furniinre in This was occasioned by the presence in a small company, of a married couple, not $wo years wedded, who were knowm to have lost much of love‘s ardor. ‘Their inâ€" difference was so apparent as to have beâ€" come a subject of remark with their friends **Never, Leonar1, never!" was almost Sremulously whispered back. "That is impossible! â€"â€"Those whoâ€" truly: love, love A tranquil spirit is not possible under such cireumstances. Overwhelming labor and absorbing care must attend them. It has ever been soâ€"it was with Leonard Williams. Even before the warning of the first years his fine brow began to wear a shadow and his eye to have an expresâ€" And each believed that it was so. Let us follow them a little way on their life & shadow and his eye to have an expresâ€" sion. .. There.wasah failing â€"warmth in. his manner towards his btide that chilled her tions of their happiness.. She only felt that‘ her husband was changing, that warmth was diminishing and the shadow eoming in place of the sunshine. And so the years went on, ho strugâ€" gling and striving with the world in the arena of business, and she trying to find in the unsubstantial, gilded exterior of things that pleasure she fuiled to extract from the real. heart, at times, as if cold _ airs had blown upon it suddenly. She was too young, too inexperienced and ‘too ignorant of the world to comprehend the causes that were at work undermining daily the foundaâ€" fashionable dissipation. The coldmess of feeling, as well as of exterior was mutual. A few years longer, and all the l:ttle tenâ€" der courtesies that marked their intercoursâ€" es when alone fiiled utterly. Williams would meet his wife on his daily return from business without a changing counâ€" tenance or tender word, and she met at evening and parted with an air of indifâ€" ference that iced over the surface of his Daily and weekly and monthly the change went on, he getting more and more absorbed in business, and she finding a certain poor compensation of heartâ€"weariâ€" ness in dress, gay company, pleasure and There was an ardor about the But what would his fashionable wife say "And with us it is true," said the husâ€" indâ€""true, warm, eternal love !" evening. How eagerly they , and the sunshine slow pacing face with the manner of one who fi heard unpleasant words, but did not fully ""It would cost us less to board, and you would be free from household cares," he added, , «Don‘t think of it, Leonard1" was*Sher prompt reply, spoken in very decided tones. "I cannot be induced to give up my eleâ€" gant home. As to household â€"cares, Lâ€"am not troubled by them." * make a solution of saltpetreâ€"say a pint of boiling water upon an ounce of saltpetreâ€" and when thoroughly dissolved, put it in a vottlé. and : stand in a cool place. Before ""If that is all, the question may as well sleep," raplied his wife almost indifferentâ€" ly, "for it costs quite as much to live in : a firstâ€"class hotel, or. boarding house as in your own home." Williams had no more to say. A deep sigh fluttered on his lips; his gaze withâ€" drew itself from the countenance of his wife and fell to the floor; his head sank low upon his bosom, thought went from timés happens, however, that the nitre reâ€" maingundissolved, and the milk retains the ~ebjectionable flavor. Instead of thig, The disagrecable tastes given to butter when the cows are fed on turnips may be effectually corrected by the use of a little common nitre (or saltpetre); but the comâ€" mon mode of using this preventative is fiot the best. It has been usual to put a lump of saltpetre in the milk pail. It someâ€" his home to wander amid the seething reefs toward which his vessel was driving, through which he might steer in safety to a simooth haven. â€" He felt cooler toward his wife after that, and sheâ€" was conscious of the coldness without imagining the cause. There are such, reader, all around you. But keep your heart warm.. Do not suffer it to grow cold toward your wife or husâ€" band. Shut out the vain things of the world. The homeâ€"loves are warmest, the homeâ€"lights are bright»st, and they will grow warmer and brighter with years if you feed them with the pure oil of unselfish affection. How to Correct Bad Tastes in Butter. No change in the style or cost of living took place. ‘That heavy burden he had to carry in addition to his other heavy burâ€" dens, and it required all his strength. During the two years that elapsed beâ€" fore his feet were on firm ground again he appeared to have lost all interest. in his home, his wife or his children. Mrs. Wilâ€" liams frequently said, lightly, speaking to friends or acquaintances, that she had no husband now, Mr. Williams having united himself to business in a second marriage. If she spoke thus in his presence, he would part his lips in a forced smile, or perhaps say jocosely that she had better have him ‘ before the courts for bigamy. Ah that we could write from henceforth a better record of Leonard Williams and his wife, that we cou!d tell you how, growâ€" ing at last weary of their vainâ€"existence, they turned back, athirst for the pure waters whose sweetness had once reâ€" freshed them, finding again the fountain of etercal youth! But it was not so. Habits of thought and feeling were hardâ€" enel into that second nature which is rarely broken up. If, occasionally, the restless heart returned along its lifeâ€"jourâ€" ney, seeking for some of the lost flowers and vanished fragrance, their sweetness was perceived only as the dim delight of a dream, not real enough to inspire an effort to seek their restoration. And so they moved on in the coldness of twilight. Age found him a sordid, irritable, unhappy man, and her a nervous, restless,vain, dissâ€" appointed woman. Fashion, show, pleasure, filled up all the time of Mrs. Williams which was not doâ€" voted to maternal duties and household cares, and business was the Moloch at which Mr. Williams sacrified all social and home affections. At forty, with a family of interesting children springing up around them, they were but coldly tolerant of each other. Never having seen from the beginning of her imarried life, any good reason for econâ€" omy or selfâ€"denial, Mrs. Williams had failed ‘to practise these virtues, but had suffered the opposition vices of extravaâ€" gance and vain selfâ€"indulgence to grow rankly as offensive weeds. Her demands upon her husband‘s purse had, therefore, always been large, and they steadily inâ€" creased, until he was learning to hold the strings more tightly, and to question and object whenever she made what he thought large requisitions. ‘Thus alienations were constantly engendered, and, at times, there was strife between them. (Roughness on his part, and petulance on hers, often came in to help the work of estrangement. Twenty years of a false life, twenty years in which two married partners, warm and loving at the first, went on steadily growâ€" ing cold toward each other through the irâ€" terposition of sordid and worldly things, twenty years of a home intercourse but rarely brightened by loves warm sunshine breaking through the leaden clouds of care or folly,â€"what a sad heartâ€"story is here ! And is it not the history of thousands of overâ€"earnest business men and their thoughtless, unsympathizing, fashionable wives, who seek outside of hearts and homes what they can never findâ€"that tranquility of soul after which all aspire, but to which so few attain ? Alsas thatitis sol "It is a question of cconomy," said Randolph and the Landlord. night at an inn at the forks of tue road. The innâ€"keeper was a fine old‘ gentleman. Knowing who his distinguished guest was, he endéavored to draw him into conversaâ€" tion, but failed in all his efforts. But in the morning, when Br. Randolph was ready to start, he called for his bill, which, on being presented, was â€"paid. The landâ€" lord, still anxions to have some conversaâ€" tion with him, began as follows: In the meantime he stopped during the night at an inn at the forks of tie road. "I asked," said the landlord, "which way your were travelling." "Have I paid my bill?" "Which way are you travelling, Mr. Randolph ?" "Sir!" said Mr. Randolph, with a look of displeasure. e Durhamâ€"Tuesday before Mount Forest. Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednesday in each month. Hanoverâ€"Monday before Durham. Dundalkâ€"Tuesday before Orangeville. _ Do I owe you anything more ?" “NO." "Well, I am going just where I pleaseâ€" do you understand ?" The landlord ty this time had got someâ€" what excited, and Mr. Randolph drove off. But to the landlord‘s surprise, the servant returned to inquire which of the forks of the road to take. Randolph not being out of hearing distance, the landlord spoke a% the top of his voice : Beware or Iutratio®s. Ask for Dr. Thomas Eclectric Oil. See that the sigâ€" nature of 8. .N. Thomas is on the wrapper, and the names of Northrop & Lyman are and the names of N: orth‘x:g & Lyman blown in the bottle, and no other. by all medicine dealers, Price 25 cents. NORTHROP «& â€"LYMAN, Toronto, Ont., Proprietors for Dominion. "Mr. Randolph, you don‘t owe me a cent; just take which road you please !" Clifford wants a town hall and lockâ€"up. §$200 has been granted by the County Counâ€" cil to be applied in building a lockâ€"up. trK Thomas‘ Eclect:ic Oil for a lame knee which troubled me for three or four years, and I never found any thing like it for curing lameness. I% is a great public benefit." _ it equally as good for horse as man."â€"A Maybee, Merchant, Warkworth, writes, "I have sold sorae hundred bottles of Eclectric Oil, and it is pronounced bi:he public, ‘one of the best medicines they have ever..used ; it has done wonders in healing and relieving pain, sore throats etc., and is worthy of the greatest confidence."â€"Joseph Rusan, Townâ€" ship of Perey, writes, "I was pursuaded~ to flms c hm B acd . dnty e e oA recommend it to all." _ â€"â€"J. H. Earl, Hotel Keeper, West Shefford, P. Q. writes, .1 have been troubled with liver complaint for severâ€" al years, and have tried different medicines with little or no benefit, until I tricd Dr. ‘Thomas‘ Eclectric Oil, which gave me immeâ€" diate relief, and I would say that I ha e used it since with the best effect.. No one should be without it. ~I have tried it on my horses The President‘s message vetoing the Sil« ver Bill was read in Congress on Thursday. The House then passed the Bill over the veto by 196 to 78; and the Senate by 46 to 19. A successful business man says there were two things which he learned when he was eighteen, which were atterwards of great use to him, namely="‘never to lose anz thing, and never to forget anything." An old lawyer sent him with an important paper, with certain instructions what to do with it. â€" "But," inquired the young man, {)artial °i’ndgmentz of the peo%e for any ength of.time. _ One of theseis Dr. Thomas‘ Eclectric Oi!, Read the following and beconâ€" vinced .â€"Thos. Robinson, l-arulgam Centre, P. Q., writes, "I have been afflicted with rheumatism for the last ten yearsâ€" and have tried many remedies without any relief, unâ€" til I tried{)r. Thomas‘ Eclectric Oil, and sincs then have had no attack of it. 1 would Rev. T. C Rrown, Brooklyn, Ont. saysâ€" "My wife was very low with lung disease and given up by her physician. I io-ght a bottlso of the "éloshonee’n Remedy," and at the end of two days she was much better By continuing the Remedy she was perfectly restored," Price of the Kemedy in pint botâ€" tles $1 ;~ Pills 25 cents a box. Wuar uEy say or It! A rew Facts ror THz Prorte.â€"There are but few preparations of mecicines which have withstood the imâ€" «"suppose I lose it; what shall I do then ?" The answer was with the utmost emphasis, "You must mot lose it!" "I don‘t mean to," said the young man, *‘but suppose I should happen to ?" â€" "But I say youmust not happen to! I shall make no provision for any such occurrence. You must not lose it !". This put a new train of thought into the young man‘s mind, and he found that if he was determinzd to do a thing he could do it, He! made .such provision against every contingency that he never lost anything. â€" He found this equally true about forgetting. If a certain matter of importance was to be remembered, he pinned it down on his mind, fastened it there, and made it stay.â€"Interior, â€" Rev. Geo, W. Grout, Stirling, Ont., says â€"*"Mrs George Francis was severely afflicted with kidney disease, and had been under the with kidney disease, and had been under the gare of three physicians without any benefiâ€" cial result, She has since taken four bottles of the ‘‘*Shoshonees Remedy," and enjoys the best of health." Revy. R. H. Craig, Princeton, N. J, llsl â€" "Last Stmmer when 1 was dn Canada I caught a bad cold in my throat, It became se bad that often in the middle of my sermon my throat and tongue would become so dry I could hardly speak. My tongue was covâ€" ered with a white parched crust, and my throat was much inflamed. An old lady of my congregation advised me to use the ‘"Shoâ€" shonee‘s Remedy," whichshe was then using The first dose relioved me, and in a few days my throat was nearly well. I discontinued the use of it, but my throat not being enâ€" tirelx well, became worse again. J procured another supply. and am happy to say that my throat is entirely well, and the white erust has disappeared. 1 wish that every minister who saffered from sore throat would try the ‘"Great Shoshonees Remedy." "Yos." Rev. R. H. Craig) Princeton, ‘N. o!'-hlfÂ¥l ote.â€"Eclectricâ€"Seclected and Electrized. MONTHLY CATTLE FAIRS. See what the Clergy Say of cuts, wounds, etc., and think +44>++ and contains a vast amount of interesting * LOGAL AMND FORMQEK NEWS, READIXG MOST APPROVED KINDS. The Large and rapidly fncreasing Olrou And with the Greatest Promptitude, Can depend npon being satisfied by leaving in the Townships of Glogelg, Bentinek, Normandy, Egremont, Proton, Artemesia, Osprey, Melancthon and other Townâ€" ships makes it one of the Having lately made an addition to our Job Department, oF Is now fitted up in the very bost style, and Possesses great Facilities for doing all "Grey Good Family Newspaper «sGrey Review," Bost Mediums for Advertisers, Best Style of the Art, Job Work "GREY REVIEW" Price $1.30 per Annum, K2"POSTAGE FREE.=3 The office is furnished with 88 COLUMN should subscribe for the In the County of Grey, If not paid in advance. type, OF THE LATEST W ORK. us their orders. done in the very Al who want a lation of the PL _ oR N CRA 3 ) 0 PW NUsTE u.,ir.L 38 A i4 e B Has just received a large Stock of Stone China Tea Sets, Toilet Sets,&¢, Tweeds, Cottons, Winceys, Lustres, &c., HATS and CAPS ; a few more of those splendid BUFFALO ROBES, a prices which cannot be undersold. All kinds of WmfldinMOompmiunlov&h. Farm Property Insured against Fire and Ligh:ning for 3 years at 75 cents on the $100. (LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE.) Man and also his Horse Insured against accidents and death from any cause, Dundalk, August 30th, 1877. Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Millinery, and Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Flour, Oatmeal and C:opped Stuffl. Bill Stuff cut to order at short notice, All kinds of Scasoned Lumber kept constantly on hand. Prices greatly reduced, for Cash only, after First March. Accounts collected sharp. C C TLumber, Dundalk Insurance, Loaning and GENERAL AGENCY. Durham, Feb, 14, 1878. Durham, Feb. 14, 1878. Chopping and Gristing attended to at shortest notice, Durham, February 14, 1878. YICTOIA TEA STORE. Loans Advanced on Town or Village Property. Good Mortgages and Municipal Debe: Bought. nicati attended to." Always to be lound in the Office, on Monday» and Tuesdags. CLOTHING ! °3 Moth-mwx:hbumh:mv';:nhnit nms‘osgwmtum ntorest princi borrower having ight to pay is at any time by‘v'-gonl::'tvomth'm Bn:“.tu private mmm. N., G. & J. McKECHNIE, NEWEST STYLES, AND LOWEST PRICES. E. & A. DAVIDSON, SELLING OFEF. .. & J. McKECHNIE, Special Discount for One Month. Call and See for yourselves. Durham, Feb. 14, 1878. Selling Goods Cheap For Cash. Beautiful Patterns, Splendid Value, *3 Manufacturers and Dealers in M O N EY . Lower Town, DURHAM. MANUFACTURERS OF . & J. McKECHNIE, shingles. DEALERS IN Another Stock, AT COST. 12 Orrics, Main Stret, Duudalk. nnd Tâ€"ath. &o.; A good Black yl J. . HUNTER, yl J. H. BROWN. y3l y Go To Bolster‘s DRUGS, PATENT MEDIOINES, Pang, aud OIL8, MACHINE OLLS%, BRUsSHpy of All Kinds, Biscuits and Confectionery, Teas, Tobaccos, and pipes, in large y ariety FANCY TOYS and POILET ARTICLEy to suit every machine, and any article ; these lines not in stock, will be ulr‘:lult,dn .peei.ny on applieation. The Proprietor is making these lines a speciality and consequently can do betier for his eustomers than those in poney) North of Scotland Canadian Mortgage Co. General Managers, 38 King Stroe; E Toronto. is not casily earned in thes times, but 1t can bemade in three months by any one of either sex, in any part of the ccuntry who is willing to work steadily at the employment that we furnish 866 per week in your own town. . You need not be away from home over night, â€" You can give your whole time to the work oronly your spare moments, . We have agents who ar making over $20 per day. â€" AL who engage at once can make money fat. At the preseny time money can not be madeso casily at any other business, Jt costs nothing to ty the business. _ Terms and 85 Outfit free, Address at once, H, HMaruerr & Co., Portland, Mainc, $1,500,000 to lend in Canada at 8 per cent Interest. to take subscriptions for the largest, cheapâ€" est and best llustrated family publication m the world. Any one can become a susessssfnl agent. â€" The most clegant works of art given free to subscribers, _ The price is so low that almost everybody subscribes,. One agent 1 portsmaking over$150 in a week. Alad) agent morhahqonr 400 subscriber in ten days who engage make money fast. . You can devote all your trme to the business, or on}y {our spare time. You need not be away from ome ov;t“fiifilt. You can do it as well as others. . Acnlars, directions and terima free. Elogwtmetrem%w()utm free. 1t you want profitable work send us your address at once. It gosks nothing to try the business, No one who en fails to make great pay, Adâ€" dm"'l\egwple’-.luumnl,"!'urfland, Mainc., GOLD .: Expenses reduced to the lowest pos figure, and the loan put through in the « est possible spave of time. Farmers if you waut Money apply to GEO. RUTHERFORD, Am Ax oun Prysicrax, vetired from active prac tice, haying had placed in his hands by an East India Missionary the formula of a Vegetabl Remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, aiarrh and all Throsat and Lung Affections ; also a Positive and Radical Cure for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having thoroughly tested its wonderfal curaâ€" tive powers in thousands of oases, fools it his i.t'yrio make it known to his suffering tolâ€" lows. mfled by this motive and a conâ€" scientious desire to relteve human sufloing, he will sond FREE OF CHARGE, to all who dcsire !t. this _M‘PG. ‘_’It‘l full |hn~c(>|‘uu.- f;ux preparing and successfully using. . Sent by return addressing with stamy», namiug Note the fullowing advantages : You can fit your own time for repayment, You can repay the loan by instalment or by one payment, 7 € You can pay off the whole or any portion « the loan at any time by giying notice an interest at once ceaseson the portion paid If you have arranged to pay by iustalmen you will not be subject to a heavy tine i you are not prepared to make the pay ment and will simply be charged th interest on the arrears. An average yemly payment of $§147 for toi years puys off a loan of OXE THOUSAXD DOLLARS. GEO. RUTHERFORD, Bewing Machine Needlcs Books and Stationery, CONSUMPTICON CURED. geare old; had been out ol Lewiti for mbout five yean. | :“w three or four diflerent doctors, nd uIJ iâ€"l‘dhi ing in my wighi down, with down upon the lungs. bearingit down, with continual d opping in the thromt and ‘o'.-n:-lhhm. Such was ty coudition when 1 comâ€" to take your Ortarrh Iemedy, one bottie of -ha eased imy pains and give e mn improved mppeiite “Ilkl.‘v botties 1 was restored to health. so us to be wble to endure burd wid continued labor, such s cbopâ€" warious medicines, without recelving any r-r-umu A-uolli continued rather to grow woree, untli last trli. when becomeso bad as to be unabie to wo un hour‘s work m l“.‘:‘nnu soreuess mnd pmin under the shouider L‘h: ‘lhmqh I.lu shoulders, With very inme Lack, and ABE FOs Lis. Li: . RLD‘SCONSTITUTIONAL BEMEDT ANL Tase s Crubs Dundalk, Sept. 18, 1877 fl..l. B. HARDING. Bim,â€"Deing dexirous that others may know someâ€" lhlld the merite of your Commmnmomat, Cammauum I.: wot, Iwish to inform you whit i: hm done for me. . 1 as W MESSRSY, PELLATT & osLn: M ON EY | T-Tdi'.;' I.-v}i;nf‘ nln::u.h.u‘«.l. labor, such s chopâ€" * clearing innd, ut whic ve beon won. My secovery 1 attribute soleiy, :d. G«R .10 the ase of your mmm‘. ‘unu e@1 per butue, _ ___________MENEY GNLDI for your jung me though there was a ABLRPOND, Agont, Main Street, Dundalk Great chanee to make money, _ We need a person in every tow»n s, MOA TREAl Oue, & ist, rt 25 Ordinary motices of births deaths, and all kinds of local 1 free of charge, Attorney at law Notary Public, residenceâ€"Dun Barrister, Solicitor i Notary Public. 0 Orangeville, _ oppos Whop. + Po. six month® . . Do, thnce months . . Casaal advertisements cha tame for the first insertion, nnrl‘ for eath subsequent insertionâ€" BTRAY ANIMALS, «o., ad weeks for $1, the advertison weed 8 lines. Advertisements, except when by written instructions to the inserted until forbidden, and c wlar rates, FROST & CcowPE l;ABlllS'l‘l".llH and Aunli Bolicitors in Chancery, &c.,€ Flesherton. | Flosherton Ofice in tug â€"Opou every Wliunsdiay . ALFRED FROST, w Professional and business cards space and under, per year, Iwo mehes or 24 lines Aonpart Three inches do. per year . . . m& column, per year. . . .. column, * rir i Une column, ** . o. six month® . Barrister, Attor (‘.hu“ry Couys Owen Sound, TERMS:â€"$1.00 per year it %®. $1.25 if not paid within tw 1} Provincial 1 D rmugehstosmen obe. . filumht Censtantly on hand pUNDALK. At the Office, Garafraxa Street Durham, â€" â€" Pire and 1/if Gemeral A peas oril ols end of th vewrs â€"or Borrowers Morigages 14 Every ‘Thu Lots 32, 83, a Osprey, 80 mere Cem. Proton. "THE RE Farms For BUSINESS DIRE Seveal good 1 In Proton, M JOS. McA Convey in The best ( Tux Oubt and vi Farm and V #@ Bus June 2 Marriase Cortific Fobruary 1 County Crowi M 42 Do You Want * MacRAE, REAL ES .u‘”i“("flw 8 STATION, â€" â€" â€" Du Good Family Flour 4 Dundiak, Feb. 23. 1877â€" Dundalk D IMr. P. WHI D. MecDONELL ARRISTER, ATDORNE â€"Upper Town, Dusham, Ont TOYS, FAXNCY # y8 Oy=ter 1t Dund At from BRATES OF ADVERT Comuus MAITLAND For Sale C Also that ne nas of J. W Dundalk 18 LEMONS, \ ORANGES, FRESH o\'fl# pPURE APP 18AA¢ J A MES 1.A M« and Is PUBLNYED Attor PBR 1censes, Oil »QI THC 1 34 al HCH ¢* J. OW MeCAl Sound 14 M » *«

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